The State Department’s Directorate of Defense Trade Controls last week issued two new risk compliance matrices, one for businesses and one for universities, to help them comply with the International Traffic in Arms Regulations. The matrices, which have been under work at DDTC since at least November (see 2211100023), are meant to guide exporters, manufacturers, researchers, academics and others through an assessment of their ITAR export control risks. DDTC said that after using the documents to conduct an ITAR risk assessment, organizations and researchers should “use that data to create an effective and tailored ITAR compliance program and allocate resources as appropriate to prioritize and mitigate those risks.”
The State Department published a final rule in the Federal Register this week to officially extend relaxed export restrictions for certain defense goods and services involving Cyprus. The agency announced last month that it planned to renew the measures (see 2308210013), which were first introduced in a September 2020 rule that amended the International Traffic in Arms Regulations to relax restrictions surrounding exports of nonlethal defense goods and services to Cyprus, and also eased restrictions on reexports, retransfers and temporary imports (see 2009020045). The agency has extended the rule each year since (see 2209190009 and 2211210028). The latest renewal, effective Oct. 1, expires Sept. 30, 2024.
The Commerce Department is looking into whether a Chinese-made chip powering Huawei's latest smartphone was made or acquired through means that violated U.S. export controls, an agency official said this week. “We are working to obtain more information on the character and composition of the purported 7nm chip” included in Huawei’s new Mate 60 Pro+ smartphone, the official said. The Chinese telecommunications company announced the new phone during Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo’s trip to China earlier this month.
The Bureau of Industry and Security is still “developing” a rule that will expand the agency’s restrictions on certain activities that support foreign military, security or intelligence services, Hillary Hess, the agency’s regulatory policy director, said during a Sept. 12 Regulations and Procedures Technical Advisory Committee meeting. The rule, hailed by one lawmaker as the “largest expansion of presidential export control authority in several years,” will implement a provision in the FY 2023 defense spending bill that will allow BIS to expand its U.S. persons controls to capture certain sensitive services to foreign intelligence agencies (see 2212210032).
The Bureau of Industry and Security is drafting a proposed rule that could make “enhancements” to and simplify License Exception Strategic Trade Authorization, which authorizes certain exports to trusted U.S. allies if the foreign importer certifies that they won’t reexport the item outside a list of STA countries. BIS sent the rule for interagency review Sept. 8. The agency has said it wants more exporters to use the license exception, which could help expedite certain exports and reduce workload for the government (see 2209280042).
Congress may want to consider modifying U.S. export control regulations given the changing assumptions about the pace of technological development and the obstacles that presents for government agencies, the Congressional Research Service said in a report this month. The 40-page report suggests the U.S. may seek to review the Export Control Reform Act, which was drafted with “embedded assumptions about the pace of technological development” that may no longer be true, the report said.
The Bureau of Industry and Security is drafting a proposed rule to revise license exception Additional Permissive Reexports, which allows certain reexports of controlled U.S. items from U.S. allies, including those listed under Country Group A:1 of the Export Administration Regulations. BIS sent the rule for interagency review Sept. 1. The agency in 2020 proposed reducing the number of countries eligible for the license exception, but trade groups and companies said the move could damage U.S. competitiveness (see 2009220037).
The State Department concluded an interagency review for a final rule that would amend certain export restrictions involving Cyprus within the International Traffic in Arms Regulations. The agency sent the rule to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs Aug. 17, and the review was completed Aug. 30. The agency earlier this month said it plans to again renew a measure that temporarily suspends restrictions on certain defense exports to Cyprus (see 2308210013).
The Bureau of Industry and Security sent a final rule for interagency review that could align its export controls with certain changes made by the Australia Group, a multilateral export control forum that focuses on chemical and biological weapons. The rule was sent to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs Aug. 25.
The Bureau of Industry and Security this week released a second correction to its final rule earlier this month that expanded the scope of its nuclear-related export controls on China and Macau (see 2308110019). The correction fixes the Commerce Country Chart that was included in the original final rule. BIS also made a fix to the rule Aug. 17, correcting an "inadvertent error” in the rule’s “regulatory instructions” (see 2308170064).